Ep. 26-001 — Grounded: The Houston Hobby Airport Bidding Battle | Supreme Court of Texas
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For over 20 years, Pappas Restaurants ran the food and beverage concessions at Houston's Hobby Airport. Then the City held a bidding competition — and after three rounds spanning three years, awarded the contract to a competitor by a slim margin.
Pappas fought back, arguing the City violated Texas law by skipping required competitive bidding procedures on a contract worth well over $50,000. The City said the law didn't apply because the contract generates revenue for the City rather than spending it.
The Court of Appeals sided with the City and threw the case out. But the Texas Supreme Court said — not so fast.
In this episode, we break down what the Supreme Court ruled, why a single "No City Expenditure" clause wasn't enough to end the case, and what it means for any Texas city trying to award a major contract without following the competitive bidding rules.
🔑 Key issues covered:
- When does Texas's competitive bidding law apply to city contracts?
- Can a city escape scrutiny by labeling a contract a "revenue deal"?
- What is jurisdictional discovery — and why did it save Pappas's case?
AI-generated summary of Texas Supreme Court Opinion No. 24-0796, decided January 9, 2026. For informational purposes only. Not legal advice.